Let's see if the person monitoring my posts closely enough to shit on my solution every time I post it will pretend not to see this and then not answer me.
>>12696740Suppose there is a function f of one scalar variable x such that the domain of f is the closed connected interval [0,3]. Is the number x=7-4 in the domain? What about x=3? I anticipate that you will say something like
>nuh-uh>7-4=3 is a special case>there is a numeral "3" >its existence somehow modifies the equivalence relation such that 3 can be in the domain but 7-4 isn't in the domain despite the fact that 3=7-4.Since I anticipate such a stupid response, what about pi/2? Is x=pi/2 in the domain of f, shitcunt? We can only express this number as an operation on pi which is not in the domain of f.
>inb4 nuh-uhAnd it is the same with inf_hat. Although inf_hat itself is not in (-inf,inf), just like pi is not in [0,3], the number x=inf_hat-1 is in (-inf,inf) just like x=pi-1 is in [0,3]. You are so stupid you literally disgust me.